The Outbrain Module & SEO Scoring (For Publishers)

Let’s start by noting that the Outbrain module does not have a direct impact on a website’s SEO efforts. Therefore, this means that it has no negative impact on your SEO.

How’s so?

The Outbrain module is based on JS (JavaScript). While Google can parse JavaScript, it tends not to index the results of it. Google will only penalize a site if it is being used to cloak malicious links, stuff keywords, disrupt the user experience, or otherwise violate one of Google’s search conduct codes.

Paid traffic that moves from site A to site B goes via the URL paid.outbrain.com, which is not visible to Google as we use the “noindex,nofollow” meta tag, and block it via robots.txt. Essentially, we don’t transfer any link juice from site to site; therefore our widget does not gain SEO value.

Organic links from Site A to Site A that go through traffic.outbrain.com are not pure “organic” links. These are “referral” links. You can view them in your analytics and measure them as non-organic traffic.

The Outbrain module loads asynchronously, which means the widget load occurs independently of the page load. They don’t wait for each other – so Outbrain won’t slow down page performance, or hurt your page load time, which is an important factor in search engine rankings and UX.

The Outbrain module maintains the lightest weight, and it’s constantly being optimized.

The module improves the readers’ UX, bringing them into discovery mode via an accurate algo that serves relevant, interesting content.

By exposing your content to real users, you can better understand how to strategize your next optimization actions, and how to optimize your content for future readers.

The Outbrain Engage team is always here to provide support and assistance with any issue or concern. Feel free to reach out to your AM or contact support@outbrain.com.

Worried that your UGC (User Generated Content) will get swallowed? Our team will integrate your comments section into the widget, so your site will keep generating engagement and conversation, as always.

The Outbrain Module & SEO Scoring (For Advertisers)

So you’ve created great content, put a lot of effort into testing and optimizing it – but you’re just not getting enough eyeballs. This is where Outbrain comes in.

With Outbrain, you can expose your content to a relevant audience, using precise targeting options that help create engagement and nurture traffic through to the conversion process at the end of the funnel.

For many SEO specialists, this creates an important question: “Is my content safe from SEO issues, when using Outbrain?”

The answer: Yes.

Here’s why:

With Outbrain, your content is exposed to a relevant audience. This generates real interest and engagement, actual shares, and the potential for natural backlinks.

Like publishers, the more exposure your content gets, the more information you get to help you focus your optimization efforts. For example: is the content not engaging enough? Perhaps it’s the UX that needs improving? Or maybe it’s the landing page? All these optimizations will help your SEO, but more importantly, will help engage and convert your future readers.

Although your content is promoted on premium publishers sites (like CNN, People, TIME, ABC News and many more), you are not getting any additional backlinks from the campaign, and therefore you don’t need to worry about losing them, once your campaign ends.

About Link Juice

As the Outbrain module appears on many pages on your website, “clean/direct” links to your content pages could be considered “sitewide links”. (Check out the video below for more on this subject.)

This is widely considered as bad practice. When your site-wide links change frequently, the situation is made even worse, as the promoted content on the Outbrain module is dynamic.

You should aim for the optimal web structure, which is a pyramid-based structure. With pyramid-based structures, you signal to the search engine bots your most important pages. The overall web structure should remain static and stable.

Credit: Moz.com

So, when redirecting occurs through Outbrain’s domain, it ensures that there is no threat to your search performance.

What’s more, content recommendation modules are great for content discovery. They help users navigate to the next article in a way that traditional navigation never could. And, the more exposure your content receives, the more shares and traffic you are going to get.

Therefore, the Outbrain module ultimately encourages engagement and improves the user experience, as well as the likelihood of gaining natural backlinks.

You’ve Got the Answer

We all know that gaining traffic through SEO takes time – and patience. Next time you are wondering how Outbrain affects your SEO, just refer to this article and remind yourself that Outbrain is engineered not to have a negative impact. And with increased engagement and traffic, it can only help your SEO.

So, keep creating high quality, valuable content for your audience. In the meantime, we’ll continue to focus on creating the best native experience, delivered to your best audience.

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Liraz Postan

Liraz is an international SEO and content expert, helping brands and publishers grow through search engines.
She is Outbrain's former SEO and Content Director and previously worked in the gaming, B2C and B2B industries for more than a decade.

There are a number of factual errors in this that make appear to be a diverting response to Google’s recent comment on Outbrain rather than a useful article.

1) “The traffic that goes from site A to B (in terms of paid links) goes through paid.outbrain.com, which is not visible to Google because we use “noindex”. Basically, we are not transferring any link juice from site to site.”

Noindex stops the page being indexed, Google can and will still follow links on it.

Hi John, Indeed you are correct.
Please note the links are nofollow as well- I made an editorial fix regarding this matter.
Re JS- Google renders this JS element just like any other element on the page. Google isn’t indexing the links on the JS element- you can see cache version of any our widget pages to prove it.